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  • haversack — [18] Etymologically, a haversack is a ‘bag for oats’. The word comes via French havresac from German habersack, a compound formed from the now dialectal haber ‘oats’ and sack ‘bag’. This denoted originally a bag used in the army for feeding oats… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • Hafer — Sm std. (10. Jh.), mhd. haber(e), ahd. habaro, as. havoro Stammwort. Führt mit anord. hafri auf g. * habrōn m. Hafer . Air. corca, kymr. ceirch Hafer (< kelt. * korkkjo ) könnte für das Germanische auf eine Grundform (ig.) * korkwro (mit… …   Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen sprache

  • haver — {{11}}haver (n.1) oats, Northern English, late 13c., probably from O.N. hafre, from P.Gmc. *habron (Cf. O.N. hafri, O.S. havoro, Du. haver, O.H.G. habaro, Ger. Haber, Hafer). Buck suggests it is perhaps lit. goat food and compares O.N. hafr he… …   Etymology dictionary

  • oat — (n.) O.E. ate (pl. atan) grain of the oat plant, wild oats, of uncertain origin, possibly from O.N. eitill nodule, denoting a single grain, of unknown origin. The English word has cognates in Frisian and some Dutch dialects. The usual Germanic… …   Etymology dictionary

  • kapro- —     kapro     English meaning: goat     Deutsche Übersetzung: “Ziegenbock, Bock”, presumably allgemeiner “male animal”     Material: O.Ind. kápr̥th m., kapr̥thá m. “penis”; Gk. κάπρος “boar”, also σῦς κάπρος; Lat. caper, caprī “he goat, billy… …   Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary

  • haversack — [18] Etymologically, a haversack is a ‘bag for oats’. The word comes via French havresac from German habersack, a compound formed from the now dialectal haber ‘oats’ and sack ‘bag’. This denoted originally a bag used in the army for feeding oats… …   Word origins

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